I would disagree with the comment about looking for a perfectly symmetrical
Christmas tree. That is exactly what I don't look for, because I put up the
Christmas tree in a corner in a fairly small room, so I need a tree where
approximately a quarter of the circumference has lower branches that are either
shorter or more upright than the other three quarters.
Matt Giwer (almost) wrote:
>
> Take for example a symmetrical Christmas tree, perfectly symmetrical
> being the search on December 20th. But there is a good and bad side.
> Also a real tree has good and bad seasons over its years of growing. A
> real tree tries to maximize its sunlight. A real tree has other trees
> competing for sunlight.
>
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